Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0740441 (acute diarrhea)
2,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-six full-term newborns (15 males and 11 females) were followed-up from birth to 5 months of age. During the first month of life, all of them were breast-fed. Thereafter those infants whose mothers produced enough milk continued breast-feeding (n = 16) while the remaining (n = 10) changed to an adapted milk formula supplying approximately 2 g/kg/day of protein and 100 Kcal/kg/day. At 4 months of life, all infants were vaccinated with one oral dose of RIT 4237 rotavirus vaccine of bovine origin. Before and one month after the vaccination, total protein immunoglobulin and IgM type antibodies against rotavirus were evaluated in serum. Growth, weight, length, head circumference and nutritional serum parameters were comparable in both groups of infants as well as the immune response to the RIT 4237 vaccine. Moreover, the "take" of RIT 4237 oral rotavirus vaccine was not lowered by the concomitant administration of human breast-milk which is known to contain rotavirus antibodies. Therefore, breast-feeding is probably not a contraindication for vaccination with RIT 4237, which is most important in developing countries where rotavirus infection is common in young infants and results in acute diarrhoea often leading to death.
...
PMID:Response to RIT 4237 oral rotavirus vaccine in breast-fed and formula-fed infants. 301 54

Epidemiologic evidence from Finland indicates a dramatic change in the seasonal pattern of acute diarrhoea over the past 30 years. While in the 1950's the majority of cases occurred in late summer the seasonal peak in the 1970's was in winter and spring, coinciding with the prevalence of rotavirus infections. It is not possible to determine retrospectively the aetiologic agents involved in the summer diarrhoea, but EPEC may have been one of them, as EPEC are quite rare in Finland today compared to the 1950's. Another change over the time period is a shift in the age distribution of acute diarrhoea from neonates towards older infants. Rotavirus is today associated with approximately 50% of the cases of acute diarrhoea in children in Finland. Based on experience in one Central Hospital it was estimated that the treatment of rotavirus infections may require some 7300 hospital days in Finland annually, which figure is comparable to that of mumps. As a recent cost-benefit analysis in Finland indicated that a mumps vaccination programme would be economically quite efficacious, the same could be assumed to be true for rotavirus vaccination, provided that an effective and safe vaccine was available. In a preliminary trial of RIT 4237 strain of live attenuated rotavirus vaccine in 20 healthy adult volunteers no clinical symptoms and no excretion of vaccine virus were observed. Rotavirus ELISA antibody booster response was found in 1/20 vaccinees.
...
PMID:Epidemiologic background for the need of rotavirus vaccine in Finland. Preliminary experience of RIT 4237 strain of live attenuated rotavirus vaccine in adults. 630 78